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Styled in Africa: African Hairdresser and Barbershop Signs

Exhibition of the Museum of African Art on display at the Slovene Ethnographic Museum in Ljubljana


“Styled in Africa: African Hairdresser and Barbershop Signs”
Exhibition and catalogue by Nataša Njegovanovic-Ristic, MAA senior curator


The Slovene Ethnographic Museum
www.etno-muzej.si
2, Metelkova street, Ljubljana

Exhibition opening: December 8th 2011, at 6 p.m.
The exhibition will be on display at SEM until February 26th 2012

Visiting exhibition “Styled in Africa: African Hairdresser and Barbershop Signs” is a result of international cooperation between the Slovene Ethnographic Museum in Ljubljana and the Museum of African Art in Belgrade. The inaugural speech at the exhibition opening was given by Predrag Filipov (PhD), ambassador of Serbia in Slovenia,  Bojana Rogelj Škafar (PhD), director of SEM, and Narcisa Knežević Šijan, director of MAA.

Media attention by
Daily newspaper "Delo" link
TV Slovenija (1) link

Visiting exhibition “Styled in Africa: African Hairdresser and Barbershop Signs”

is a result of international cooperation between the Slovene Ethnographic Museum in Ljubljana and the Museum of African Art in Belgrade. The inaugural speech at the exhibition opening was given by Predrag Filipov (PhD), ambassador of Serbia in Slovenia,  Bojana Rogelj Škafar (PhD), director of SEM, and Narcisa Knežević Šijan, director of MAA.

 

 

 

 

 


exhibition opening


On Heat
by Katarina Radović


Opening words by:
Katarina Mitrović, curator at the Historical Museum of Serbia & Goran Gocić, publicist

Thursday, December 22nd 2011 at 7 p.m.

The “On Heat” exhibition is a photographic record of the "meeting of cultures" marked by a wedding ceremony, first in Belgium and then in Burkina Faso. Katarina Radović’s photographs are the outcome of examining the complex phenomenon of marriage in which that which is private and personal (actually most intimate) on the one hand, and that which, on the other hand, is public and includes norms, the collective, the ritual and symbolic, collide in their extremes and ambivalence of created relationship.

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Geometric goldweights. Bronze. Akan peoples. MAA Collection.

„Akan Goldweights“

 

The exhibition on display at the Visitor Center of the National Bank of Serbia
12, Kralja Petra street

October 14th – February 1st, 2012
The exhibition is opened all working days from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

 Entrance is free.

The visitors will have the opportunity to see more than 500 objects from the collection of the Museum of African Art, that bear witness to the importance of natural gold resources, trade and cultural relations of the region of West Africa in global history.

The Akan peoples that inhabit areas of Ghana and Ivory Coast rich in gold, used gold dust as currency from the 15th century until the end of the 19th century and produced  goldweights of different shapes as means of measurement. Like miniature sculptures in bronze, the goldweights represent an entire world in miniature form: people, animals, flora, artefacts, and also different geometric shapes. The rich symbolism of represented motifs is especially appealing, for many of the goldweights illustrate Akan proverbs and folk tales and treasure memories of battles, myths and legends.

Besides goldweights, the exhibition presents scales, spoons and boxes for gold dust and also examples of wax models and molds for casting bronze.

The author of the exhibition is Marija Licina, curator of the Museum of African Art.

The exhibition is organized as a result of the cooperation of the National Bank of Serbia and the Museum of African Art on the occasion of celebrating the World Savings Month that is organized every year in October.

The exhibition was opened by Ambassador of Ghana in Serbia, H. E. Samuel Valis-Akyanu and vice-governor of the NBS Bojan Marković.

PLUS: A special impression is made by the representative building of the National Bank of Serbia which dates from 1890 and also by the Standing exhibition of the NBS - “Money in the territory of Serbia”.

 

 

 
 

 

 

  • KENTE

    h_kente_small

    Kente fabric

    Ashanti people, Ghana

    Factory-spun cotton and silk

    215 x 340 cm.

    Read more...
  • JI-WARA

    h_djivara_small

     

    Mask „Ji-Wara“

    Bamana people, Mali.

    Wood.

    100 cm high.

    Read more...
  • NIMBA

    h_nimba

     

    Mask „Nimba“

    Baga, Guinea.

    Wood.

    77 cm high.

    Read more...
  • ELEPHANT MASK

    h_elephant

     

    Bamileke,

    Cameroon.

    Cloth, beads

    65 x 122 cm

    Read more...

 

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